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  1. #1
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    Bartrim thanks as you sort of reinforce one of the points I was making.
    No one style covers everything, there are great striking arts, great grappling arts and great weapon styles but no one particular style contains everything.
    While it is a sport MMA has really put it into the spotlight for martial artists that striking and grappling skills are necessary. Don't believe me? hop on youtube or search the net for real fight footage, you will almost always see that a real fight contains elements of both striking and grappling.
    Not all schools can offer a syllabus that incorporates grappling and striking techniques especially if they are more 'traditional' schools so if you have the time join another school that does offer the component that is missing.
    But the most important thing is how do you train your techniques? If it is with compliant partners and bouncy bouncy touch sparring (think NAS tournaments, and taekwondo to generalise) then you are wasting your time. Practising technique with non compliant partners and Pad work/bag work and controlled sparring with contact is essential....... or you could just do Tai Chi instead and tell everyone you are a martial artist lol

    Good to hear you are training Bartrim, your style actually sounds interesting would love to hear more about it. I read in an earlier post about you being nervous before starting, happens to me too every time I try a new school. I am starting boxing at a well known gym next week, I know how to box and have done a fair bit of Muay Thai but I still get a butterfly in the tummy feeling lol.But you have done the hardest part I reckon which is the initial commitment. Good work!

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    Just had a look at your style Bartrim on this website
    http://www.krmas.com.au/karate.html

    I have never heard of it before but looks pretty good to me mate. The Karate they teach is freestyle karate from the sounds of it which can be a very good system. Just depends on what elements are incorporated from each style and how it is trained.

    If they also teach some of the other styles like Muay Thai and MMA at the location you train at I think you should try those out too after you feel comfortable with the Karate and have a good base set of skills.

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    Thanks Hot Rodimus. It is a great style and I really enjoy it. In the 6 weeks I've been going we have done all sorts of striking (punching, knees, kicking) and last night we did hip throws. Again I like how practical it is. While we learn techniques we partner up with someone our own size, but once we learn the techniques we switch partners around to learn about leverage and throwing people of different shapes and sizes. I also questioned my sensei last night because he was explaining about how all the moves in our kata including the prep are actual fighting moves. One movement we do is an eye gouge. I questioned the honour of using an eye gouge. He told me that while it wasn't honourable KRMAS concentrates on practicality and if you ever get into a situation where you need to use the techniques chances are your opponent wont exactly to be concerned with honourable fighting techniques.
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    sounds good Bartrim, an instructor who will explain things like yours does is a good sign also if you question things your instructor should be able to explain the principles or reasoning behind it instead of not knowing or saying something like "that is how the masters did it".

    Totally agree with using things like eye gouges not that I ever have. If you train to use it effectively then it can be a great weapon to have in your arsenal. It is not something I have trained much to do, we did learn them when I did wing chun years ago but to me it was hard to train as I prefer other strikes. He is spot on the money about honour having nothing to do with it too, honour really has nothing to do with fighting once the actual fight begins.

    Sounds like you have got a good school, thank god you didn't have a GKR dojo near you, those guys are almost everywhere and are the Amway of Martial Arts....but I better not get started on that lol.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bartrim
    While we learn techniques we partner up with someone our own size, but once we learn the techniques we switch partners around to learn about leverage and throwing people of different shapes and sizes.
    That's good. It's good to always practice with different people, not just because of different size but also different speed, tempo etc. Even in the same style/school everyone fights differently; I find fighting forms are like handwriting - it's unique to each individual and no two are exactly identical. Having two people from the same school trained in the same style is like watching two people write the same text in the same language... but the actual handwriting itself is uniquely distinct.

    Quote Originally Posted by Bartrim
    I also questioned my sensei last night because he was explaining about how all the moves in our kata including the prep are actual fighting moves. One movement we do is an eye gouge. I questioned the honour of using an eye gouge. He told me that while it wasn't honourable KRMAS concentrates on practicality and if you ever get into a situation where you need to use the techniques chances are your opponent wont exactly to be concerned with honourable fighting techniques.
    Very true.

    And I suppose this is where some of my skepticism about sport fighting comes from because when you fight as a sport you are fighting within set conditions and set rules; whereas when training to fight for self defence we should never assume that anything will be set. For example one of the single most common mistakes I experience with sport fighters is that they often leave their groin exposed, and I've even met some sport fighters who outright REFUSE to guard their groin (instead they just demand that I don't attack there) - insisting that it's a "dog" move. Of course it's a dog move... but as your sensei says, we should never assume that our opponent carries a sense of honour that prevents them from using cheap moves.

    My question about the eye gouge would be that it seems to me to be more of a fine motor skill technique, which as Hot Rodimus pointed out before, is impractical in a real fight where you're scared poopless. Furthermore, I've heard people say that eye gouging is overrated as even dogs will continue fighting with eyes bitten out. But I suppose it all depends on the exact scenario and situation too... <shrugs>

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    I am probably coming across as arrogant or a hater of traditional styles.....I don't intend for this to happen
    I'm glad you cleared it up. And I'm sure I sometimes come across as an arrogant hater of modern styles too - which isn't my intention either.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    but from my real life experiences my opinions differ greatly from what has been posted by others and as this is a 'forum' I thought I would throw my two cents in.
    We're all entitled to our own preferences and opinions. You're right about me having a greater theoretical knowledge of martial arts than a practical one though. I recognise this as a weakness of mine and I do definitely plan on changing this.

    If there's anyone in Western Sydney willing to get together on a casual basis for some friendly training, I'd be up for it. I have all kinds of equipment to keep it safe. All styles and levels of experience welcome of course... we are all students of the martial arts.

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    having boxed and done muay thai before and sparred against those guys I would still back one of these guys in a street fight over any traditional stylist, especially if both have only been training for a short amount of time.
    Having trained in traditional and 'sport' styles I have pretty much moved on to only being interested in training in sport styles... I will throw judo in as being a sport style too lol.
    Ask yourself, which styles are respected world wide for striking? muay thai and boxing. Grappling - Brazilian Ju jitsu and judo most likely, both very much sporting styles. What makes them effective? All of them are relatively simple in their approach and techniques but most importantly they are all trained in a manner that prepares students for what a real fight is like.
    If you train in martial arts, ask yourself when was the last time you got hit in class? Sure most people learn this stuff so they don't get hit but if you have never been hit your never going to know how to not get hit or what to do when it does happen.
    Once again I don't intend to put down traditional styles as they do have a lot going for them but for a lot of them to advertise they offer 'self defence' is a joke and it really cause for false advertising claims lol

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    Quote Originally Posted by GoktimusPrime View Post
    My question about the eye gouge would be that it seems to me to be more of a fine motor skill technique, which as Hot Rodimus pointed out before, is impractical in a real fight where you're scared poopless. Furthermore, I've heard people say that eye gouging is overrated as even dogs will continue fighting with eyes bitten out. But I suppose it all depends on the exact scenario and situation too... <shrugs>
    The eye gouge in our Kata comes after a back elbow. I believe it is in only in there because our arms extend completely in the opposite direction in that movement and they want us to show martial intent.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    Ask yourself, which styles are respected world wide for striking?
    I think that entirely depends on which people you ask and which circle you're looking at.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    muay thai and boxing. Grappling - Brazilian Ju jitsu and judo most likely, both very much sporting styles. What makes them effective? All of them are relatively simple in their approach and techniques but most importantly they are all trained in a manner that prepares students for what a real fight is like.
    It depends on the training. And this applies to both all martial arts - sport or traditional.

    In my experience a lot of muay thai fighters that I've sparred with are just shockingly POOR at defending their genitals and often hitting them in the groin is just too easy. And as I said in my last post, I've come across some (not all) sport fighters who, instead of thinking, "Gee, I need to keep that area guarded," just outrightly _refuse_ to do so and instead just tell me not to attack there (i.e. they're asking me to be a compliant partner, which as you pointed out is a training flaw).

    Of course traditional styles work. They were forged in war across countless battles fought before the advent of the machine gun. The evolution of traditional martial arts is a lot like Darwin's evolution by natural selection - survival of the fittest. Hundreds of years ago if you went to war trained with an ineffective martial art you would be quickly killed in battle. Simple as that. If a traditional style can equip someone to defend themselves against an armed enemy combatant whose sole preoccupation in battle is to kill you quickly (so they can move on and kill your comrades and win the war), then surely it can work in modern civilian street self defence.

    Scientifically speaking in order to demonstrate something you need to be able to consistently repeat a result over and over and over again right? If we look at the pre-machine gun history of martial arts... that's your continual repetition and we can see consistent results. Techniques that survived have done so because they've repeatedly worked. If we take sport martial arts and observe the volume of people around the world who train in it versus the number of people who actually become good enough to win tournaments and be considered exceptional fighters, I'd argue that those exceptional fighters would be a selective portion (arguably a minority?) of all people who practice sport martial arts. YES - you can also make the same conclusion about traditional martial arts, I will accept this - and I would say that this demonstrates the decline in the quality of traditional martial artists (note I said artists, not art).

    Theoretically speaking, if we could wave a magic wand and undo the invention of the machine gun, then teach different martial arts to various armies of the world (say for example if the Australian army learnt a sport style and the North Korean army learnt a traditional style etc.) and then had a world war -- THEN we could see how well the styles and practitioners would fare! Of course this is impossible.

    I'm not to say that learning a traditional martial art is an instant guarantee that you will be an effective fighter. It all depends on the training, as well as other factors like teacher competency and student competency. The best martial art will still fail at the hands of an incompetent practitioner. It's like say taking a really well made car and letting a bad driver drive it - then they smash the car. Do you blame the car or the driver?

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    If you train in martial arts, ask yourself when was the last time you got hit in class? Sure most people learn this stuff so they don't get hit but if you have never been hit your never going to know how to not get hit or what to do when it does happen.
    Legally you're not meant to get hit in class. A martial arts instructor has the same legal duty of care as a school teacher and is lawfully bound to maintain student safety. Students can and do take legal action if injury occurs were reasonable means have not been taken to ensure student safety and/or treat injury if it occurs. I'm aware that a lot of martial arts teachers do ignore these regulations - and as many instructors have told me, it's a major factor as to why the insurance premiums for instructors keep going up every year... a cost which is then passed onto students with increasing fees.

    Now I do agree that people do need to be conditioned to take hits... but there are safer and more legal ways to do this beyond allowing students to actually hit each other. Because if simply getting hit was enough, then just smack yourself with a hammer all over every day and you should be invincible. Traditional martial arts use body hardening conditioning exercises like arm knocking and leg knocking. I've seen this done in Goju Karate so perhaps you've experienced it. Others exercises like Pigua also involve striking yourselves in places like the body just to condition it to being hit. The difference between this and allowing yourself to be hit is that you can control the degree of how hard or soft you want to be hit. The idea is to start of with gentle bumping then gradually increase the severity as your tolerance improves. It's the same with any kind of conditioning -- if I started doing weights for the first time I wouldn't jump onto 100kg dumbells straight away. You start with something light first then gradually lift heavier weights as you get stronger.

    I visited a Goju Karate Dojo in Japan and this black belt asked me to punch him in his stomach as hard as I could as many times as I wanted. I belted away as his gut and he didn't flinch! This was obviously done through gradual conditioning. I know that Seido Karate practitioners do little punches over their body as they do sit-ups.

    Some sport martial arts and non-martial art sports have stuff which conditions endurance too. Practitioners of any art that involves throwing/falling like Aikido, Jujutsu, Judo etc. are naturally conditioned because their bodies are frequently hitting the mat. Anyone who plays a sport that involves tackling (e.g. rugby) have good endurance too for obvious reasons.

    So there are ways of conditioning the body to endure hits in a safer and more legal way beyond just hitting people.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    Once again I don't intend to put down traditional styles as they do have a lot going for them but for a lot of them to advertise they offer 'self defence' is a joke and it really cause for false advertising claims lol
    You know what - the majority of martial arts schools I come across - traditional, sport or otherwise - do not teach proper self defence. And it's simply because the training is wrong.

    If traditional martial arts are unworkable, then what the hell did people do in battle for the last several centuries and millenia of human conflict?? You think the Spartans just stood in front of the Persians and hurled "Yo Momma" insults? Or that the Romans Legion just carried weapons for the fun of it?? It's not as if it's only been in recent times that effective martial arts were suddenly invented and anything before it didn't work.

    Just because a lot of people don't know how to use traditional martial arts properly doesn't mean they don't work. Imagine if you found a group of children with Transformer toys, and most of them didn't know how to transform them properly. Does it mean that all Transformer toys are crap and poorly designed? Not necessarily... it could just be a group of kids who don't know how to play with them properly

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    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    Sorry Gok but I read your posts in this thread and I can't help but think your someone who reads a little bit too much into the theory of things and idolises the 'old masters'.
    I have a preference for traditional styles for reasons I've mentioned before.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    In reality it is better to practise simple techniques as your fine motor skills rapidly get thrown out the window and all your fancy techniques that have been practised with a compliant partner (most schools are guilty of this as are most demonstrations on youtube and ones shown in this thread) do not work.
    I absolutely agree.

    The difference between training and a real fight is fear. There is no fear in training because you know you're in a safe environment. And you _will_ be scared in a real fight (unless you're incredibly brave or stupid, and Aristotle did imply that there's little difference between the two ). And studies show that one thing that occurs when you're afraid is that you LOSE your fine motor skills. Hence why learning fine motor skills for self defence is bollocks. However studies also show that gross motor skills are optimised when you're afraid; so it makes more sense to learn techniques that work on gross motor skills instead.

    So I'm in complete agreement with you there.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    You were reluctant to answer if you had ever been in a real fight earlier, if you have you will know this to be true, hence why a lot of 'martial artists' or 'blackbelts' get snotted in a real fight. They have either never been exposed to real violence before or not trained for it or they are ineffectual as there perfectly practised roundhouse punch or spinning dragon magic kick with no shadow didn't turn into the fight stopper like it did in the dojo/kwoon.
    90% of a fight is psychological and I find a lot of competent fighters actually avoid getting into fights rather than experiencing them. I agree that a lot of well trained martial artists _do_ get creamed in real fights. This would be, as you've implied, due to ineffectual training.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    A lot of what you type has sound principles as I have read a lot of this before but instead of taking other peoples words as gospel broaden your horizons and expose yourself to other styles and training so you can actually comment on it from experience. You bag out some styles for being 'sport' styles etc but in reality a lot of these guys who train in these styles are better equiped for a real fight than you and your traditional stylist practitioners.
    I don't think I ever "bagged" out sport styles. I simply said that I'm skeptical for reasons that I've mentioned before.

    But I have repeatedly said time and time again that ultimately the best style is the style that WORKS for you - even if it's a sport style. And I have also said that sometimes a practitioner of a sport style CAN be a better fighter than someone from a more traditional background.

    A classic example would be Mohammed Ali and Bruce Lee. Mohammed Ali practised modern boxing, what I consider to be a sport style. Bruce Lee's background was in Kung Fu and he developed Jeet Kune Do, what might be considered to be traditional. But if you put Mohammed Ali and Bruce Lee - in their prime - in a cage fight, I would put my money on Mohammed Ali.

    Mohammed Ali was a bloody fantastic fighter who actually understood and executed the concepts of traditional martial arts BETTER than a lot of traditionalists; i.e. "float like a butterfly sting like a bee" = you need to be hard and soft = yin and yang. For all of Bruce Lee's training in traditional styles he was - at best - a mediocre fighter.

    So while I have a preference for traditional styles, please don't think that it means that I therefore disregard anyone who practises sport styles.

    I've said this before too - the important question is NOT "what style do you do?" but "Can you fight?"

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    Just wondering how long you have been training for?
    Considering you can spar with your arms tied behind your back and with a blindfold you must be impressive,
    No, I've never said I was impressive. I just happened to be sparring against a very ineffectual opponent at the time.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    But the most important thing is how do you train your techniques? If it is with compliant partners and bouncy bouncy touch sparring (think NAS tournaments, and taekwondo to generalise) then you are wasting your time. Practising technique with non compliant partners and Pad work/bag work and controlled sparring with contact is essential.......
    Absolutely agree. I dislike training with overly compliant partners. Your partner needs to compliant enough to keep your training safe - but not too compliant that they're letting you win or not providing a realistic challenge.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hot Rodimus
    or you could just do Tai Chi instead and tell everyone you are a martial artist lol
    That's an unfair generalisation.

    First of all, there are many styles of Tai Chi - some are usable in fighting, some aren't. Secondly, even with the fighting styles of Tai Chi - you have competent practitioners and not so competent practitioners.

    As someone once said to me, "The individual matters more than the style."

  10. #10
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    I am confused Gok, or it could be my ignorance of Tai Chi, I have heard of a few styles but never really seen much more than people practising flowerery moves in the air.
    How is this going to be of use? Yes most of the moves performed in Tai Chi are actual combative techniques and if you really analyse them you can find brutal techniques that eyegouge twist necks etc but it lacks real training methodologies
    I do believe that any style trained in the 'right way' can work or be adapted to work in real fight situations. I am not saying your wrong but I have never seen tai chi practitioners hit pads or spar etc. I do profess ignorance when it comes to Tai Chi but I would be suprised if it was effective.

    I would also be interested if anyone has clips off youtube of martial arts working in real fights. Whenever I have seen footage of traditional martial artists spar with hard contact or get in a real fight it always ends up looking like kick boxing or boxing.

    I am probably coming across as arrogant or a hater of traditional styles ( I have trained in Shito Ryu Karate,Wing Chun, Goju Karate in the past and had a great time doing so.). I don't intend for this to happen but from my real life experiences my opinions differ greatly from what has been posted by others and as this is a 'forum' I thought I would throw my two cents in.

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